Monday, 7 November 2005
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Environmental Implications of Sensor-Based Variable-Rate N Application in Corn.

Darrin F. Roberts1, Newell Kitchen2, Peter Scharf3, and Ken Sudduth2. (1) University of Missouri-Columbia, 269 Ag Eng Bldg, Columbia, MO 65211, (2) Univ. of Missouri/USDA-ARS, 243 Agricultural Engineer Bldg, Columbia, MO 65211, (3) Univ. of Missouri, 210 Waters Hall, Columbia, MO 65211

Active-light reflectance sensors have shown to be an effective method to assess site-specific N need for variable-rate fertilizer applications in wheat. Several research groups, including ours, are investigating this technology for corn N fertilization. This 2004 study was conducted in Missouri on seven producer corn fields to compare environmental measurements of N from sensor-based, variable-rate N application with single-rate, whole-field N application. Measurements included economic optimal N rate (EONR), crop N yield use efficiency (YUE), N fertilizer recovery efficiency, and post-harvest soil nitrate measurements. Averaged over all fields, the sensor-based method reduced N fertilizer rate by 37 kg/ha. As N rate increased and approached EONR, YUE decreased for each of the seven fields. Yet within a field, EONR and YUE were spatially variable. Compared to conventional single-rate application, sensor-based application did reduce post-harvest soil nitrate for some sub-field areas with little or no reduction in yield. Based on these preliminary results, the use of active-light reflectance sensors to control in-season corn N fertilization in the U.S. Midwest is promising.

Back to Nitrogen Management in Corn Production
Back to S04 Soil Fertility & Plant Nutrition

Back to The ASA-CSSA-SSSA International Annual Meetings (November 6-10, 2005)